Abstract

BackgroundCurrent management of children with minor head trauma (MHT) and intracranial injuries is not evidence-based and may place some children at risk of harm. Evidence-based electronic clinical decision support (CDS) for management of these children may improve patient safety and decrease resource use. To guide these efforts, we evaluated the sociotechnical environment impacting the implementation of electronic CDS, including workflow and communication, institutional culture, and hardware and software infrastructure, among other factors.MethodsBetween March and May, 2020 semi-structured qualitative focus group interviews were conducted to identify sociotechnical influences on CDS implementation. Physicians from neurosurgery, emergency medicine, critical care, and pediatric general surgery were included, along with information technology specialists. Participants were recruited from nine health centers in the United States. Focus group transcripts were coded and analyzed using thematic analysis. The final themes were then cross-referenced with previously defined sociotechnical dimensions.ResultsWe included 28 physicians and four information technology specialists in seven focus groups (median five participants per group). Five physicians were trainees and 10 had administrative leadership positions. Through inductive thematic analysis, we identified five primary themes: (1) clinical impact; (2) stakeholders and users; (3) tool content; (4) clinical practice integration; and (5) post-implementation evaluation measures. Participants generally supported using CDS to determine an appropriate level-of-care for these children. However, some had mixed feelings regarding how the tool could best be used by different specialties (e.g. use by neurosurgeons versus non-neurosurgeons). Feedback from the interviews helped refine the tool content and also highlighted potential technical and workflow barriers to address prior to implementation.ConclusionsWe identified key factors impacting the implementation of electronic CDS for children with MHT and intracranial injuries. These results have informed our implementation strategy and may also serve as a template for future efforts to implement health information technology in a multidisciplinary, emergency setting.

Highlights

  • Current management of children with minor head trauma (MHT) and intracranial injuries is not evi‐ dence-based and may place some children at risk of harm

  • Participants in this study were either physicians who care for children with MHT and intracranial injuries (ICI), physicians with relevant administrative roles, or information technology specialists experienced in the development and implementation of electronic clinical decision support (CDS)

  • Most (61%) participants were between 30–39 years and male (59%), and the largest percentage of participants were from either neurosurgery (34%) or emergency medicine (28%)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Current management of children with minor head trauma (MHT) and intracranial injuries is not evi‐ dence-based and may place some children at risk of harm. There have been several large-scale efforts to develop and validate clinical decision support (CDS) tools guiding the need for computed tomography (CT) imaging in children with MHT [4, 5]. One of these tools developed by the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) network has subsequently been implemented in several large-scale trials [6, 7]. Universal intensive care unit (ICU) admission strains limited resources and may subject patients and families to unnecessary emotional distress [9,10,11]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call